How do humans whistle?
Prashanth Tamilselvam – ptamilselvam@hawk.illinoistech.edu
Bluesky: @prashanth-t.bsky.social
Instagram: @prashanth_tamilselvam
Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, Illinois, 60616, United States
Francisco Ruiz
ruiz@illinoistech.edu
Illinois Institute of Technology,
Chicago, Illinois,60616
United States
Popular version of 4pMU15 – Experiments on the flow acoustics of Human whistling
Presented at the 189th ASA Meeting
Read the abstract at https://eppro02.ativ.me//web/index.php?page=Session&project=ASAASJ25&id=3976527
–The research described in this Acoustics Lay Language Paper may not have yet been peer reviewed–

When you whistle, the tongue rises against the roof of the mouth, leaving a small gap. The lips form a second constriction, and the space between acts as a resonant chamber, much like the tube of a flute. Pitch is controlled by moving the tongue to change the space between it and the palate. But geometry alone is not enough: we have found that only a specific combination of airflow and lip shape creates a ‘sweet spot’ leading to a stable tone. Maybe this is why so many people struggle with it.
Figure 1
In our experiments, involving orifices shaped like the hole of a donut to represent the lips, we found periodic vortices coming out (fig 1). These vortices are released at a frequency that is exactly the pitch we hear, showing that whistling is not simply blowing air but a precise coupling between the flow and the sound (fig 2a). The shape of the lips has a significant influence on the sound. Too narrow or too wide an opening suppresses the sound, and the front-to-back contour of the lips must encourage clean airflow separation (see how the non-toroidal lip geometry in fig 2b manages to whistle only within a small range of air velocity). This subtle control of lip geometry is essential for sustaining a clear, steady whistle.
Figure 1